While most Kenyans are deep regurgitating the fallacy that is our political realm, old money is silently humming assiduously under the watchful eye of the grey haired owners of Kenya.
Sample this:
The profile of the average Kenyan board member is typically a 60-year-old-plus male with close ties to the former first two families or their governments and probably serves on more than one board. (Kenya’s capital markets guidelines permit people to hold seats on up to five boards at the same time.)
However, this position is at odds with Capital Markets Authority (CMA) guidelines that advise against boardrooms that do not represent a company’s broader shareholder structure, gender representation or national outlook, but critics argue that lack of enforcement has rendered the regulation ineffective.
Some of the prominent names that sit on the boards of more than three companies include Richard Kemoli, Andrew Ndegwa, Jeremiah Kiereini and Francis Okello and Akif Butt (who represents business magnate Naushad Merali who is reducing his boardroom presence).
Others are Wilfred Kiboro, Evanson Mwaniki and Titus Naikuni, who are getting a larger stake of boardroom roles after spending decades in the executive suites.
Seventy-five-year-old Kemoli sits on the board of Bamburi Cement, EABL, Kakuzi, Unga Limited and CMC Motors.
Mr Kiereini, 81, has roles in CMC Motors, EABL, Unga Ltd and CFC Stanbic and, like Mr Kemoli, holds directorship in several listed companies.
The 42-year-old Ndegwa is the son of former Central Bank Governor Duncan Ndegwa and sits on the board of Unga Ltd, NIC Bank and EABL as well as a string of other private firms owned by his father like Insurance Company of East Africa and First Chartered Securities.
Besides owning vast shares on their own, Mr Kemoli, Mr Ndegwa (Duncan) and Mr Kiereini have deep connections with the two former first families and are believed to hold shares in trust of Moi and Kenyatta.
It’s important to note that the trio has board roles in almost the same companies, which stems from their association in two investments vehicles — ALICO and Heri Limited — which were formed by senior politicians and civil servants during the Moi and Kenyatta administrations. Their interests span real estate, financial services and manufacturing where their families and business associates have board roles.
But this old-boy network has locked women from Kenya’s boardroom as they occupy only 38 out of the 418 seats on the boards of the 45 companies and half of these companies have an all-male board.
“It’s hardly a secret in Kenya that to serve on a board, you’ve got to have the right background and have the powerful network of allies to help you get there,” says Ashif Kassam, the managing partner at HLB Ashvir, a consulting firm.
“It is nearly the same boardroom boys listening to their own voices in one firm after the other, limiting the flow of fresh ideas flowing into the boards.”
As a result, the voice of minority investors has remained muted in corporate Kenya contrary to Capital Markets Authority guidelines that seek to “provide a mechanism for representation of the minority shareholders without undermining the collective responsibility of directors.”
Partial article copied from the Nairobi Law MonthlyGo overdrive in purchasing the goods when there's blood on the streets, expecially if the blood is your own